Dunno, tbh. But Tonga - albeit having less raw memory bandwidth than Tahitit admittedly - did not fare tooooooo much better than it's ancestor despite modernized (read: doubled) front-end ressources. I'm skeptical.
There's actually 9 gbps GDDR5 from Micron IIRC. Albeit at a hefty 1.59 volts.
1x6pin card with that feature set and performance level is just screaming to be put in my HTPC for a full gaming experience.
PCI Express slot provides some power so the factor here is less than half (i.e. RX480 will consume more than half the power).At least, the slide seems to imply that RX480 can do it with half the power (at max) as well, it seems.
It seems unlikely to me that RX480 needs the bandwidth that GDDR5X provides.That said the nvidia 1070 did not suffer it seems going with the Samsung 8Gb/s GDDR5, and maybe AMD decided the same for their 480/x GPU, but wonder how late in the day they made that decision.
What is strange is that back awhile ago the 67DF:C4 Polaris was shown to be using GDDR5X (10gbps like 1080), now I appreciate the presentation back then said GDDR5X or GDDR5 depending upon availability and that the photo was back before they had made their business decision; heard the image goes back to Capsaicin.
http://vrworld.com/2016/04/13/amd-polaris-10-gpu-beat-competing-pascal/
That said the nvidia 1070 did not suffer it seems going with the Samsung 8Gb/s GDDR5, and maybe AMD decided the same for their 480/x GPU, but wonder how late in the day they made that decision.
Cheers
What is strange is that back awhile ago the 67DF:C4 Polaris was shown to be using GDDR5X (10gbps like 1080), now I appreciate the presentation back then said GDDR5X or GDDR5 depending upon availability and that the photo was back before they had made their business decision; heard the image goes back to Capsaicin.
http://vrworld.com/2016/04/13/amd-polaris-10-gpu-beat-competing-pascal/
That said the nvidia 1070 did not suffer it seems going with the Samsung 8Gb/s GDDR5, and maybe AMD decided the same for their 480/x GPU, but wonder how late in the day they made that decision.
Cheers
That said the nvidia 1070 did not suffer it seems going with the Samsung 8Gb/s GDDR5, and maybe AMD decided the same for their 480/x GPU, but wonder how late in the day they made that decision.
Agreed, just strange that going back all that time ago the soon to be released GPU was seen with 10Gb/s GDDR5X and now not mentioned.PCI Express slot provides some power so the factor here is less than half (i.e. RX480 will consume more than half the power).
It seems unlikely to me that RX480 needs the bandwidth that GDDR5X provides.
Yes, I'm fully aware of that and that's why I calculated it in. 75 and 75 watts respectively for slot and 6-pin connector, so 150 watt altogether, strictly going by spec. Whereas Hawaii XT had a 6- and an 8-pin connector as well as the slot. 300 watts altogether - of which a max of 150 watts is half, I think.PCI Express slot provides some power so the factor here is less than half (i.e. RX480 will consume more than half the power).
Fair point.It seems unlikely to me that RX480 needs the bandwidth that GDDR5X provides.
Maybe the 480X does bring GDDR5X but its clocks are below 10GT/s in order to get lower-binned chips and/or lower their voltage (and save power)
For example, the 290/X had 6GT/s chips but only clocked them at 5GT/s.
LOL good point,Funnily enough, 1.250 MHz memory clock as well as a device ID beginning with 67 can both also point to the original Hawaii cards with some OC or Hawaii refresh with some UC.
It needs to be the latest GDDR5 memory though at 8Gb/s.For 1070 using gddr5 is a good way to differentiate - ie keep overclocked versions at distance from the 1080. On the other hand for the top Polaris offering it could make sense to provide it with faster than neccessary memory to squeeze out the last bit of performance.